Excerpt from History of the Lives, Sufferings, and Triumphant Deaths, of the Primitive as Well as the Protestant Martyrs, From the Commencement of Christianity to the Latest Periods of Pagan and Popish Presecutions: To Which Is Added an Account of the Inquisition; The Bartholomew Massacre; The Massacre in France, and General Persecution Under Louis XIV.; The Massacres of the Irish Rebellion in the Year 1641
His crucifixion took place May 1, A. D. 52 which day, together with that of St. James the Less, is observed in commemoration of the event.
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John Foxe, martyrologist, is remembered as the author of what is popularly known as Foxe's Book of Martyrs, an account of Christian martyrs throughout history but especially emphasizing the sufferings of English Protestants from the fourteenth century through the reign of Mary I.
Foxe's prospects, and those of the evangelical cause generally, improved after the death of Henry VIII in January 1547, the accession of Edward VI, and the formation of a Privy Council dominated by pro-reform Protestants.
Although both he and his contemporary readers were more credulous than most moderns, Foxe presented "lifelike and vivid pictures of the manners and feelings of the day, full of details that could never have been invented by a forger." Foxe's method of using his sources "proclaims the honest man, the sincere seeker after truth."
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